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Whyte's overtime field goal earns Lions 41-38 victory over Ticats

Whyte's overtime field goal earns Lions 41-38 victory over Ticats

National Post3 days ago
HAMILTON — Sean Whyte's 19-yard field goal earned the B.C. Lions a 41-38 overtime win over the Hamilton Tiger-Cats on Thursday night.
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Whyte capped B.C.'s first overtime possession with his game-winning boot. Hamilton had the opening possession but former Ticat DeWayne Hendrix recovered Tim White's fumble following a completion, to the dismay of the Hamilton Stadium gathering of 29,012.
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B.C. (4-5) earned its first win in three games and avenged a 37-33 home loss to Hamilton on July 27.
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Hamilton (6-3) had its six-game win streak snapped.
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Hamilton forced overtime on Marc Liegghio's 29-yard field goal on the final play of regulation, ending a five-play, 44-yard march that began with 32 seconds remaining. It came after Nathan Rourke found James Butler on a 16-yard TD pass at 14:22 to end a seven-play, 85-yard drive that began at the B.C. 25-yard line with 1:47 remaining.
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Liegghio's 43-yard field goal at 13:07 of the fourth staked Hamilton to a 35-31 lead. It was set up by Julian Howsare's interception and 32-yard return that put the Ticats at the Lions' 38-yard line.
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Liegghio banked a 43-yard field goal in off the upright at 11:01 to give Hamilton a 32-31 lead.
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Whyte had put B.C. ahead 31-29 with a 39-yard field goal at 6:45. It came after Liegghio missed from 36 yards out for the single at 4:03 that broke a 28-28 tie.
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Isaiah Wooden Sr., Jevoni Robinson, Shemar Bridges and Kiondre Smith scored Hamilton's touchdowns. Liegghio had three converts, three field goals and a single while Nik Constantinou added a convert.
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Butler, with two, Jevon Cottoy, and Jeremiah Masoli had B.C.'s touchdowns. Riley Pickett added a two-point convert while Whyte booted four field goals and three converts.
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At halftime, Hamilton added Miles Gorrell, a Hall of Fame offensive lineman, to its Wall of Fame.
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B.C. tied it 28-28 on Pickett's two-point convert following Masoli's three-yard TD run at 14:32 of what was a 36-point third quarter.
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Bo Levi Mitchell gave Hamilton a 28-20 lead with a nine-yard touchdown pass to Smith at 12:48. It followed Roman Horrall's recovery of Seven McGee's fumble at the B.C. 15-yard line.
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Mitchell put Hamilton ahead 21-20 with his three-yard touchdown pass to Bridges at 8:48. Butler's five-yard run at 3:50 put B.C. back ahead 20-14.
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Mitchell's 22-yard TD pass to Robinson put Hamilton ahead 14-13 at 1:06. The Ticats opened the second half scoring on a two-play, 76-yard march with punter Constantinou converting in place of the injured Liegghio.
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Rourke's 15-yard TD strike to Cottoy at 14:49 of the second quarter staked B.C. to a 13-7 halftime lead. It capped a smart 100-yard, six-play drive that included a 57-yard completion to Ayden Eberhadt.
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‘We're Team North America': Edmonton climbing camp trains young Canadian and American athletes
‘We're Team North America': Edmonton climbing camp trains young Canadian and American athletes

CTV News

time4 hours ago

  • CTV News

‘We're Team North America': Edmonton climbing camp trains young Canadian and American athletes

A competitive climbing club in Edmonton hosted a joint training camp for both Canadian and American climbers in the first event of its kind for Canada. NW Climb YEG partnered with Ice Climbing Canada (ICC) to host teams from both sides of the border for a three-day training camp at Edmonton's permanent outdoor competition-grade climbing structure in Louise McKinney Park. The camp saw 36 athletes: 12 from the U.S., the rest from Canada. Jonathan Blackwood, chairperson for ICC, said the whole weekend was designed for beginner to intermediate climbers. 'Our coaches, one from Canada and two from the U.S., have designed a really good bunch of sessions to cover everything that we require into this sport … so we can cover a good, solid foundation for people entering the sport,' he said. The advent of Canada's first permanent outdoor climbing structure, Blackwood said, is a 'game changer.' 'We're really trying to prove this concept across Canada with this, and there's been a lot of talk generated over this location and the ability that we have here,' he said. 'The problem with the sport is we just don't have enough venues.' Catalina Shirley, a U.S. coach at the camp, said she loves the structure. 'I love that it's downtown. I love the excitement that it brings to competitions. And I also love the access that it gives to people who live around Edmonton,' she said. 'It's really awesome to see kids as young as 12 picking up ice tools for the first time, and coming here to climb and train and meet friends and enjoy everything that comes with starting a new sport.' While ice climbing has often been considered a remote sport, Blackwood said the venue in Edmonton would 'open up the doors' in educating the general public on both ice and dry climbing. They intend to keep looking for young people who want to learn more about the sport – and going as far as occasionally covering the cost for an introduction to dry climbing. 'The whole intent is to bring them here, show them another sport that's going to challenge them and really give a sense of fulfillment, because it's just the climber and the wall,' Blackwood said. While it's an individual's mental game to climb as high as they can, he said the team element is still crucial. That community, both he and Shirley said, were visible at the camp. Shirley said the camp has had some light-hearted banter between the two countries, but it's all in fun. 'We're all kind of like, 'We're Team North America,'' she said. With files from CTV News Edmonton's Marek Tkach

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